269 research outputs found
Experimental Approach Embankments at Salt Fork River Bridges on US 177 and Their Initial Performance
This paper presents preliminary findings based on the initial performance evaluation of five approach embankments used in a bridge replacement project over the Salt Fork of the Arkansas River on US Highway 177 in Noble and Kay Counties, Oklahoma. The research involved instrumentation and measurement of four experimental approach embankments and one control approach embankment, all with similar dimensions. Instrumentation inc1uded total pressure cells to measure lateral earth pressure against the abutment wall, inclinometer casings to measure lateral movement of the backfill material and abutment walls, telescoping couplings on the inclinometer casings to measure settlement of the backfill and foundation, amplified liquid settlement gages for measurement of foundation settlement, and piezometers to measure pore water pressure. The four experimental backfills used were geotextile reinforced granular backfill, controlled low strength material backfill, dynamically compacted granular backfill, and flooded and vibrated granular backfill. The control section was unclassified borrow material placed at the contractor\u27s discretion as long as density requirements were met. This paper documents and presents summaries of the preliminary findings regarding initial performance and construction cost of each approach embankment
The propagation and seismicity of dyke injection, new experimental evidence
To reach the surface, dykes must overcome the inherent tensile strength of the country rock. As
they do, they generate swarms of seismic signals, frequently used for forecasting. In this study we pressurize
and inject molten acrylic into an encapsulating host rocks of (1) Etna basalt and (2) Comiso limestone, at
30 MPa of confining pressure. Fracture was achieved at 12 MPa for Etna basalt and 7.2 MPa for Comiso
limestone. The generation of radial fractures was accompanied by acoustic emissions (AE) at a dominant
frequency of 600 kHz. During “magma” movement in the dykes, AE events of approximately 150 kHz
dominant frequency were recorded. We interpret our data using AE location and dominant frequency
analysis, concluding that the seismicity associated with magma transport in dykes peaks during initial dyke
creation but remains significant as long as magma movement continues. These results have important
implications for seismic monitoring of active volcanoes
Pressure dependent intermediate valence behavior in YbNiGa and YbNiIn
We report a comprehensive structural and valence study of the intermediate
valent materials YbNiGa and YbNiIn under pressures up to 60 GPa.
YbNiGa undergoes a smooth volume contraction and shows steady increase in
Yb-valence with pressure, though the Yb-valence reaches saturation around 25
GPa. In YbNiIn, a change in pressure dependence of the volume and a peak
in Yb-valence suggest a pressure induced electronic topological transition
occurs around 10-14 GPa. In the pressure region where YbNiIn and
YbNiGa possess similar Yb-Yb spacings the Yb-valence reveals a
precipitous drop. This drop is not captured by density-functional-theory
calculations and implies that both the lattice degrees of freedom and the
chemical environment play an important role in establishing the valence of Yb
Focus, Vol. 1 No. 1
A literary magazine of student writing published by the Department of English of Stephen F. Austin State College.https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/focus/1000/thumbnail.jp
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Large-Scale Mercury Control Technology Testing for Lignite-Fired Utilities - Oxidation Systems for Wet FGD
Mercury (Hg) control technologies were evaluated at Minnkota Power Cooperative's Milton R. Young (MRY) Station Unit 2, a 450-MW lignite-fired cyclone unit near Center, North Dakota, and TXU Energy's Monticello Steam Electric Station (MoSES) Unit 3, a 793-MW lignite--Powder River Basin (PRB) subbituminous coal-fired unit near Mt. Pleasant, Texas. A cold-side electrostatic precipitator (ESP) and wet flue gas desulfurization (FGD) scrubber are used at MRY and MoSES for controlling particulate and sulfur dioxide (SO{sub 2}) emissions, respectively. Several approaches for significantly and cost-effectively oxidizing elemental mercury (Hg{sup 0}) in lignite combustion flue gases, followed by capture in an ESP and/or FGD scrubber were evaluated. The project team involved in performing the technical aspects of the project included Babcock & Wilcox, the Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC), the Electric Power Research Institute, and URS Corporation. Calcium bromide (CaBr{sub 2}), calcium chloride (CaCl{sub 2}), magnesium chloride (MgCl{sub 2}), and a proprietary sorbent enhancement additive (SEA), hereafter referred to as SEA2, were added to the lignite feeds to enhance Hg capture in the ESP and/or wet FGD. In addition, powdered activated carbon (PAC) was injected upstream of the ESP at MRY Unit 2. The work involved establishing Hg concentrations and removal rates across existing ESP and FGD units, determining costs associated with a given Hg removal efficiency, quantifying the balance-of-plant impacts of the control technologies, and facilitating technology commercialization. The primary project goal was to achieve ESP-FGD Hg removal efficiencies of {ge}55% at MRY and MoSES for about a month
Microneedle Enhanced Delivery of Cosmeceutically Relevant Peptides in Human Skin
Peptides and proteins play an important role in skin health and well-being. They are also found to contribute to skin aging and melanogenesis. Microneedles have been shown to substantially enhance skin penetration and may offer an effective means of peptide delivery enhancement. The aim of this investigation was to assess the influence of microneedles on the skin penetration of peptides using fluorescence imaging to determine skin distribution. In particular the effect of peptide chain length (3, 4, 5 amino acid chain length) on passive and MN facilitated skin penetration was investigated. Confocal laser scanning microscopy was used to image fluorescence intensity and the area of penetration of fluorescently tagged peptides. Penetration studies were conducted on excised full thickness human skin in Franz type diffusion cells for 1 and 24 hours. A 2 to 22 fold signal improvement in microneedle enhanced delivery of melanostatin, rigin and pal-KTTKS was observed. To our knowledge this is the first description of microneedle enhanced skin permeation studies on these peptides
Urogenital pathogens in urine samples of clinically diagnosed urinary tract infected patients in Tanzania : a laboratory based cross- sectional study
This study is part of the Holistic Approach to Unravel Antibacterial Resistance in East Africa (HATUA) project funded by the National Institute for Health Research, Medical Research Council and the Department of Health and Social Care, Award (MR/S004785/1).Background : Urogenital pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Mycoplasma genitalium and Trichomonas vaginalis have been reported to cause pyuria, however they are not routinely cultured from urine samples of patients clinically diagnosed to have urinary tract infections (UTI). In this study, pathogen specific PCR was done to identify the urogenital pathogens in the urine samples among clinically diagnosed UTI patients with negative routine urine culture. Methods : A cross-sectional study was conducted involving 227 archived urine samples from clinically diagnosed UTI patients with positive leucocyte esterase but negative urine culture results. The urogenital pathogens were detected using pathogen specific singleplex PCR. Data were cleaned and analyzed using STATA version 15. Results : The median age of patients was 31[IQR 23 – 51] years and the majority (174, 76.7%) were females. Two thirds of patients had history of antibiotic use two weeks prior to recruitment (154, 67.8%). A total of 62(27.3%) urine samples were positive for at least one urogenital pathogen. Of 62 positive samples, 9 had two urogenital pathogens and 1 had three urogenital pathogens. The most predominant urogenital pathogen detected was Neisseria gonorrhoeae 25(34.2%) and Trichomonas vaginalis 24(32.9%). Being female (aOR 2.4; 95% CI: 1.04 – 5.49; p-value 0.039) and having history of using antibiotics in the past two weeks (aOR 1.9; 95%CI: 1.04 – 3.60; p-value 0.036) was independently associated with the presence of urogenital pathogens. Conclusion : More than a quarter of female patients with clinical symptoms of UTI and routine urine culture negative results were infected with urogenital pathogens mainly Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Trichomonas vaginalis. Further research with a larger sample set in a range of settings is required to understand the implications of these finding generally.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
A global optimization approach to fractional optimal control
In this paper, we consider a fractional optimal control problem governed by system of linear differential equations, where its cost function is expressed as the ratio of convex and concave functions. The problem is a hard nonconvex optimal control problem and application of Pontriyagin's principle does not always guarantee finding a global optimal control. Even this type of problems in a finite dimensional space is known as NP hard. This optimal control problem can, in principle, be solved by Dinkhelbach algorithm [10]. However, it leads to solving a sequence of hard D.C programming problems in its finite dimensional analogy. To overcome this difficulty, we introduce a reachable set for the linear system. In this way, the problem is reduced to a quasiconvex maximization problem in a finite dimensional space. Based on a global optimality condition, we propose an algorithm for solving this fractional optimal control problem and we show that the algorithm generates a sequence of local optimal controls with improved cost values. The proposed algorithm is then applied to several test problems, where the global optimal cost value is obtained for each case
A philosophical analysis of the evidence-based medicine debate
BACKGROUND: The term "evidence-based medicine" (or EBM) was introduced about ten years ago, and there has been considerable debate about the value of EBM. However, this debate has sometimes been obscured by a lack of conceptual clarity concerning the nature and status of EBM. DISCUSSION: First, we note that EBM proponents have obscured the current debate by defining EBM in an overly broad, indeed almost vacuous, manner; we offer a clearer account of EBM and its relation to the alternative approaches to medicine. Second, while EBM proponents commonly cite the philosophical work of Thomas Kuhn and claim that EBM is a Kuhnian 'paradigm shift,' we argue that such claims are seriously mistaken and unduly polarize the EBM debate. Third, we suggest that it is much more fruitful to understand the relationship between EBM and its alternatives in light of a different philosophical metaphor: W.V. Quine's metaphor of the web of belief. Seen in this way, we argue that EBM is an approach to medical practice that is indeed importantly different from the alternatives. SUMMARY: We can have a more productive debate about the value of EBM by being clearer about the nature of EBM and its relationship to alternative approaches to medicine
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